Ulf Johansson Dahre
Associate Professor | Senior Lecturer
Det förgångna är framtiden : Ursprungsfolk och självbestämmande i Hawai´i
Author
Summary, in English
This is a study of the political change surrounding self-determination movements of indigenous peoples who are asserting a claim to inherent sovereignty and special political status. I show how these claims have forced western democratic nations to rethink basic asssumptions regarding individual and group rights and the basis of rights in political society. This task requires examining how it has been possible for indigenous peoples to be successful in extracting certain constitutional and legislative concessions leading to self-determination. Within this context I show how structuring political debate around these claims uniquely affects national policy
This study is therefore primarily concerned with the factors that have influenced that political change. In order to understand the effect of the claims of indigenous peoples the study concentrates on Hawai´i and the native hawaiian ´kanaka maoli sovereignty movement´. It focuses on how and by which strategic means the movement has been able to extract certain politically significant changes. The intention is to construct a theoretically and empirically informed framework for understanding how indigenous peoples´ movements in the West pursue goals sovereignty and self-determination.
Another central concern for this study is the comparative dimension. The anthropological perspective on political change in this field focuses on the political actors and the dynamics of interaction within the arenas of government policy, law and administration. I explore indigenous-state relations as an interplay between structure and agency. Indigenous peoples in the West not only act within the limits set by the state, they also tend to act upon these limits in reworking the political order around them. This is accomplished by employing the political argument of ´inherent sovereignty´ with its content of historically founded political identity and its moral connotations in political and the legal arenas at international and national levels. By connecting political status as indigenous peoples with the argument of inherent sovereignty it has been possible to effect significant political change that generally speaking lies outside the realm of the liberal domain of the Western democratic states.
Department/s
- Social Anthropology
Publishing year
2001
Language
Swedish
Publication/Series
Lund Monographs in Social Anthropology
Volume
9
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Department of Sociology, Lund University
Topic
- Social Anthropology
Keywords
- Human rights
- Hawai´i
- Sociology
- ethnology
- Cultural anthropology
- social anthropology
- Mänskliga rättigheter
- etnologi
- Kulturantropologi
- självbestämmande
- Hawai´i
- Ursprungsfolk
- kollektiva rättigheter
- rättsantropologi
- ursprunglig suveränitet
- Sociologi
- socialantropologi
Status
Published
Supervisor
- Jonathan Friedman
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1101-9948
- ISBN: 91-7267-107-6
Defence date
18 October 2001
Defence time
10:00
Defence place
Carolinasalen
Opponent
- Georg Henriksen (Professor)